Show 1 BrAN IN GINGINNATI Nebraskan Cordially Received in Queen City HE CONCLUDES OHIO < TOUR Fourteen Speeches Delivered onTJays I Run Through the Sta teAt Dayton He Was Presented With a Silver Horseshoe a Portrait of Himsslf and a Badge by a Gorman Society Ho Was Not Scheduled for an Address I dress There But He Responded to Presentation Address I 5 5 Cincinnati 0 Oct 01 William I J Bryan made the first speech that he has made In this city during the present pres-ent campaign He arrived on a special I train at S oclock tonight The daj > was spent entirely In this State and the Itinerary covered the country between this city and Toledo Beginning with an hours speech at Toledo at 10 oclock I thly morning Mr Bryan spoke Insuc cession at Wauscon Napoleon Ottawa Otta-wa Lima Waupokeneta Sidney Plqua Troy Dayton Hamilton and College Corners Mr Bryan received a very cordial reception re-ception In Cincinnati He was met at the station by an Immense crowd and being driven to Music hall under the escort of the Duckworth club he was there welcomed by thousands on the outside of the buildings and by as many people on the Inside of the great building as could be packed Into It HIs first speech of the evening was made to the crowd on the outside of Music hall He talked for only it few minutes and hiD address was In the most general terms but It was received with loud applause It took fifteen minutes to got the interior in-terior audience quiet after Mr Bryan made his appearance at 0 oclock The applause was general and prolonged but It afterword degenerated Into wild demands for Bryan which did not cease while Judge Harmon and Mayor Jones spoke They preceded Mr Bryan Bry-an but they spoke with but little com fort on account of the clamor HARMON BREAKS LOOSE Referring to the Philippines Mr Harmon said When our commissioners commission-ers went to dictate terms of peace to Spain they bore instructions These have been carefully withheld although the people had a rltrht to know then I when the treaty took effect When they come to life as they must we shall find that they were charged after the negotiations began I do the Presi dent Justice to believe he did not at first Intend to step into the shoes of the King of Spain but only meant to pull or buy him off the backs of the Filipinos Fili-pinos This was a plain duty He did not then mean to buy him out and con j tinue tho same business at the old stand But the President Is better at i seeing his plain duty than attending to It He takes the wrong kind l of people peo-ple Into his confidence and puts himself under their control l They turned him about face We can guess who they were because they did the same thing with him later about Porlo Rico and as he had committed himself to his duty in a message to Congress they had to turn him In the open It was well enough to make Spain relinquish to us all her claims to the Philippines which were largely pretended All we had to do was to declare then or later that we took or held them In trust for the people thereof who by our request had fouirhi sirin by I side with us to overthrow Spain What should we have thought if the French during our revolution had bought out Englands pretensIons and turned helm arms to subdue us We had no formal treat with the Filipinos as the French had with us but honest people do not raise technicalities about the obligations of honor and faljdeal Inglofnn Many thought and he whom I am soon to Introduce was one of vtlum that It would be best to end time wal and get rid of Spain by ratifying the treaty since It was made and then declare and carry out this trust I be I Hove they were right but they were deceived as to the real Intention of the President and by the resolution the I Senate adopted carefully worded so as to appear a promise and prove an eva sion So we went from an honorable war to one of conquest against those who helped us because they thought and we made them think we were help Ing them We have shed more blood and spent more money In this War than In the war with Spain and still i our boys are sent to disease ahd sllll the taxgatherer calls for more BRYAN INTRODUCED Judge Harmon Introduced Mr Bryan as the next President of tho United States There was a luttor of handker chiefs and a general shout but Mr Bryan did jiol have great difficulty In securing comparative qulpt after ho began I Th speech was largely a repe tition of former argumenls SPEAKS IN TOLEDO At Toledo Mr Bryan was Introduced by Mayor Jones and he said that he was proud to be presented b by a man to whom duty was higher considera lion than was any party Taking up the question of nonpartisanship Mr Bryan said that not only were former Republicans coming over but the Gold Democrats were coming back This he said was the natural result of 10 litical conditions and of the Republican parlys pcrslslent disregard ot the rights of the people at large In con cluding his speech he said In this city your own Mayor had to choose between the Republican party and the golden rule and he left the Republican part in order to stand by 1 the golden rule MonnelU who was I your AttornovnonrMii i Ion 1 1I 11 lO ftiinil his duty und carry out the laws and prosecute the trusts was driven out 01 his party by the trusts that con trolled the party He had to Vchobse between his convicllons und the Re publican parly and ho left the party and carried his convictions with him You Republicans have boasted thatyou loved Abraham Lincoln If you laVe the principles of Lincoln comparcthom with the practices of Hunna nnd see what a change you hat to make In your Ideas to follow the Republican party now POLICE ARREST DISTURBERS Just as Mr Bryan began to speak and while Mayor Jones was still on his feet ten or twelve of the young men who had caused a disturbance were taken In charge by the police and car rind out of the grounds They had I brought to the meeting place a hugo I boaid rcpresehlallon of an elephant labeled C 0 P which thoy wore parading about the outskirts of the Democratic meeting with much glee and many hurrahs The Mayor himself deprecated police Interference OF DEMOCRATIC MANUFACTURE I In his speech at Wuuseon Mr Brvari again charged the Republican party I with making specious pious to different classes of people and I in support of hIs assertion produced circulars ad dressed to both the Catholic church nnd the A P A Referring to these circulars he said I have received today two circulars one being sent dut to membersof thn A P A boclcly1 asking them to ole the Republican ticket as a protest against Catholics and tho other asklnr j I Catholics to vote the Republican ticket J t ns u protest against the A P A Here you had the Republicans having failed intheir appeal to peoj > le to support I Republican principles on any broad I grounds now sending out circulars appealing ap-pealing to religious prejudices I thank God that tho Democratic party Is a party to which people can belong no matter of what church they or momberp no matter what their occupation oc-cupation We believe In rcVKlous and I civil liberty and men come Into the Demociatlc party not in order to advance I ad-vance their claims against other people peo-ple but In order to protect tho rights I of al people under the American Hag Our fight has been a fight for Amerl I can principles applied to all these questions I Our fight has been a fight for those i i principles upon which the Government j has been founded We believe in in i dusirlal independence in this country and In political independence everywhere every-where under our flag TN OHIO OIL FIELDS Mr Bryans train made quite a long atop at Lima where he addressed the crowd from the carriage In which he was driven to the speaking place He J I charged the Republicans not only with I evading the campaign but specifically I asserted that they had run away from every Issue FIVEMINUTE STOPS FivemInute stops were made at tho I towns of Sidney Plqua and Troy At Sidney Mr Bryjir charged that In order Ito I-to be a Republican thcsr days a man I had to change his politics at a moments I mo-ments notice and very often This was I necessary he said because of the frequent fre-quent turns of the Republican party I on public questions Plqua furnished the best crowd of the day up to the lime of the arrival at that place and after leaving Toledo I Mr Bryan dwell there upon the question I ques-tion of trusts I RECEIVES PRESENT AT DAYTON The schedule did not include a speech at Dayton but a very pleasant incident occurred there When Mr Bryans special spe-cial train reached the station about sunset there was a crowd of sevcial thousand people assembled at that pOint Mr Bryan bad been notified that there was a desire to present him with a silver horseshoe from the Ham garl Llcderkrair socIety When the I train came to a full slop and Mr Bryan appeared on the rear platform he was greeted by prolonged and tumultuous applause A committee of three ladles representing the society then pressed their way to the front of the crowd and handed to him a box containing not only the horseshoe but a colored portrait por-trait of Mr Bryan a goldmounted badge and a letter explaining that In a contest in the society for the horseshoe horse-shoe Mr I Bryan had iccelvcd 12SO votes against 270 cast for President McKln ley BRYAN RESPONSE Mr Bryan responded briefly saying I desire the ladles who presented this horseshoe to bear my greetings to the members of the Ilarugarl society and to I say to them that while I cannot make them a spcech In German I cnn say ich dauke ihnen1 Tell them I am glad lo see that the Republican appeal to the Germans has been In vain as the Republican appeal has been In vain to oilier portions of our population fdr while the Germans want good money Lhpy want good government also but Republicans have mistaken the Germans Ger-mans when they think that they are more anxious about the kind of money they have than they are about the kind of government under which they live lam obliged to the Geimans for this horseshoe and am grateful for the large majority by which it was voted to me I believe that If we succeeded in driving every trust out of the United States reducing the standing army to its former size and In saving this country coun-try from the menace of Imperialism the I blecslngs of Democratic policies will be so universally recognized that the people peo-ple wJ1l never take the horseshoe from the White House door TWO STATES TURN OUT Ohio and Indiana both contributed to the dense audience which greeted Mr Bryan al College corners which Is on the interstate line He was enthusiastically enthusias-tically received there and In a speech of twenty minutes duration discussed the various Issues of the campaign saying among other things I have been a candidate before and during the last lour years you hUH been able to read all the Republican papers pa-pers have had to any about me I read the other day a new objection to me and that was thai I was dangerous because be-cause I was honest You have had Some of the l dangers that come from dishonesty and dont you think for a change you had better try dangers that come from honesty There Is one consolation about this charge I believe be-lieve I have convinced the Republicans lien I say a thing I mean It and I want you to believe me that If elected that every power will be used to make It impossible for a private monopoly to exist under the Administration Mr Bryan spoke for five minutes at Hamilton briefly upon the questions before the public He was liberally applauded I ap-plauded 1 |